Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
FDA Says It Will Review Experimental ALS Treatment
The Food and Drug Administration has reversed an internal decision and will now review an experimental treatment for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis 鈥 a victory for ALS patients and advocates who have been pressuring regulators to act with more urgency against the fatal, neurodegenerative disease. Amylyx Pharmaceuticals, a Cambridge, Mass.-based drug maker, said Wednesday that it will submit an application for its ALS treatment, called AMX0035, 鈥渋n the coming months.鈥 (Feuerstein, 9/15)
A combination treatment that pairs Amgen鈥檚 KRAS-blocking drug Lumakras with another of its targeted cancer medicines showed improved tumor response rates in patients with advanced colon cancer, the company said Thursday. Amgen secured U.S. approval of Lumakras in May to treat patients with lung cancer caused by a genetic mutation to the KRAS protein. But the pill鈥檚 benefit in other types of solid tumors where KRAS also plays a role has proven to be more modest, necessitating a search for combination treatments that might boost efficacy. (Feuerstein, 9/16)
A few months ago, a federal court judge dismissed all claims against more than a dozen generic manufacturers over allegations that their versions of the Zantac heartburn pill may contain a carcinogen. Now, those companies are seeking to recover potentially significant costs from approximately 1,000 people who filed the lawsuits alleging they were harmed by the pills. (Silverman, 9/15)
Hospitals participating in a federal drug discount program marked up cancer medicines four times for privately insured patients, and often charged cash-paying consumers the same as commercial insurers, a practice that does not 鈥渇it the mission鈥 of serving low-income populations, a new analysis found. Specifically, the median price charged for cancer treatments to commercial insurers or cash-paying patients was 3.8 times what was paid by 123 hospitals participating in the so-called 340B program. Moreover, the hospitals did not reduce prices charged to insurers or patients when their own purchase prices decline, according to the analysis by Moto Bioadvisors, a consulting firm. (Silverman, 9/15)
Also 鈥
Hong Kong-based Prenetics Group Ltd. is going public on the Nasdaq Stock Market via a special-purpose acquisition company, in a deal that values the medical diagnostic startup at $1.25 billion. Prenetics, whose revenue has surged during the coronavirus pandemic, will merge with Artisan Acquisition Corp. , a blank-check company founded by Adrian Cheng, grandson of the late Hong Kong real estate and jewelry magnate Cheng Yu-tung. The younger Mr. Cheng invested in Prenetics last year and held a 0.8% stake in the startup before the latest deal. (Yang, 9/16)
The gene-editing tool CRISPR is moving toward the market, promising better tests, disease cures 鈥 and maybe even a woolly mammoth. CRISPR is already a historic scientific achievement, but we're just now entering the moment when it will begin to impact patients and possibly the planet. (Walsh, 9/15)